4.7 Article

Monolithic MXene Aerogels Encapsulated Phase Change Composites with Superior Photothermal Conversion and Storage Capability

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 13, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano13101661

Keywords

MXene; phase change materials; solar energy utilization; photo-thermal conversion; aerogel

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The intermittent nature of solar energy calls for dependable energy conversion and storage systems. Phase change materials have the potential to store a significant amount of heat generated by solar light. However, only a few of these materials can efficiently convert solar energy into heat, and they need to be encapsulated in porous substrates for improved leakage resistance and photothermal performance. This research focuses on using monolithic MXene aerogels as encapsulation and photothermal materials. The composite phase change materials formed by MXene and polyethylene glycol exhibit high loading capacity and excellent cycling stability. The optimized composite material achieves a solar energy utilization of 93.5%, surpassing most reported results. This work offers promising solutions for solar energy utilization by employing MXene aerogels as encapsulation and photothermal materials.
The inherently intermittent feature of solar energy requires reliable energy conversion and storage systems for utilizing the most abundant solar energy. Phase change materials are potential solutions to store a large amount of heat produced by solar light. However, few of the phase change materials have the ability to efficiently convert solar energy into heat; additionally, phase change materials need to be encapsulated in porous substrates for enhancing their leaking resistance and photo-to-thermal performance. In this work, monolithic MXene aerogels, fabricated by Al3+ cross-linking and freeze-drying, were used as the encapsulation and photothermal materials. The composites phase change materials of MXene/polyethylene glycol can be made with a large polyethylene glycol loading above 90 wt% with the maximum of 97 wt%, owing to the large porosity of MXene aerogels. The low content of MXene has a limited impact on the phase transition temperature and enthalpy of polyethylene glycol, with an enthalpy retention rate ranging from 89.2 to 96.5% for 90-97 wt% polyethylene glycol loadings. MXene aerogels greatly improve the leaking resistance of polyethylene glycol above its melting point of 60 degrees C, even at 100 degrees C. The composites phase change materials also show outstanding cycling stability for 500 cycles of heat storage and release, retaining 97.7% of the heat storage capability. The optimized composite phase change material has a solar energy utilization of 93.5%, being superior to most of the reported results. Our strategy produces promising composite phase change materials for solar energy utilization using the MXene aerogels as the encapsulation and photothermal materials.

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